MyCorvette
Hasn't posted much yet...
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2014
- Messages
- 229
- Reaction score
- 41
- Points
- 28
- Genesis Model Type
- Genesis G90
My G90 experienced the same highway vibration issue as what others have reported here previously.
No matter what is the root cause, fundamentally speaking the vibration is caused by frequency resonance between the car body and something which is rotational and imbalanced. Yes unfortunately, the way how Hyundai designs the G90's body frame, makes its primary (1st-degree) natural harmonic resonant frequency falls within the range of something rotating at 60+ mph.
As a side note: it takes a lot of technical expertise of an automaker to design/build the car body right - one of the challenges is to push the car body resonant frequency out of the speed range that a "normal" customers typically will encounter. This is especially hard for cars with longer wheelbase.
For G90, the excitation of the resonance may come from the tire, the wheel, or the driveshafts, or combinations of them. From the way how the G90 vibrates, and how the vibration changes on various road conditions/speed, I feel the tire may be one of the major culprit and should be looked into as the first step.
Before that, I have already done road force balance on the OEM tire (Conti ProContact), no help at all. Since the compound used by the ProContact tires are very hard (feels almost like a rock instead of rubber), I suspect it generates transient flat spots which won't have enough time to recover if rotating fast enough, therefore when the tire is rotating at highway speed, for section that is not touching the ground, it is still not round, which causes the imbalance.
I pulled the trigger and swap the OEM Conti tires with the Michelin today because I have heard a lot of good stories about the Primacy Tour tires.
A couple unique (good) things about the Michelin tire:
- They have higher load rating than the factory OEM ones (102/105 v.s 98/101). The G90 is a heavy sedan (even heavier than some mid-size SUVs), the OEM tires are in fact too weak, especially the front tires.
- Both the front and rear tires are made in France, same factory same compound (For Michelin same tire same size, different country of origin still have slightly variance in terms of compound and geometry - some people on Porsche/BMW forums have done extensive comparison and research)
- Look at Michelin's product catalogue, for Primacy Tour A/S of these specific sizes, both of them have the "GOE" label (you can also see these letters molded on the side wall), which means "Genesis OEM". Since only the G90 is using these sizes, it further indicates these tires are specially designed for the G90.
I have only driven about 20 miles after changing the tire so I do not have a full review at this moment. For now I can only say 90% of the vibration has gone. I still feel"faint" vibrations on some under-maintained section of the road, which surface is non-flat and sometimes rough. I will report more findings as I accumulate more miles on these tires.
No matter what is the root cause, fundamentally speaking the vibration is caused by frequency resonance between the car body and something which is rotational and imbalanced. Yes unfortunately, the way how Hyundai designs the G90's body frame, makes its primary (1st-degree) natural harmonic resonant frequency falls within the range of something rotating at 60+ mph.
As a side note: it takes a lot of technical expertise of an automaker to design/build the car body right - one of the challenges is to push the car body resonant frequency out of the speed range that a "normal" customers typically will encounter. This is especially hard for cars with longer wheelbase.
For G90, the excitation of the resonance may come from the tire, the wheel, or the driveshafts, or combinations of them. From the way how the G90 vibrates, and how the vibration changes on various road conditions/speed, I feel the tire may be one of the major culprit and should be looked into as the first step.
Before that, I have already done road force balance on the OEM tire (Conti ProContact), no help at all. Since the compound used by the ProContact tires are very hard (feels almost like a rock instead of rubber), I suspect it generates transient flat spots which won't have enough time to recover if rotating fast enough, therefore when the tire is rotating at highway speed, for section that is not touching the ground, it is still not round, which causes the imbalance.
I pulled the trigger and swap the OEM Conti tires with the Michelin today because I have heard a lot of good stories about the Primacy Tour tires.
A couple unique (good) things about the Michelin tire:
- They have higher load rating than the factory OEM ones (102/105 v.s 98/101). The G90 is a heavy sedan (even heavier than some mid-size SUVs), the OEM tires are in fact too weak, especially the front tires.
- Both the front and rear tires are made in France, same factory same compound (For Michelin same tire same size, different country of origin still have slightly variance in terms of compound and geometry - some people on Porsche/BMW forums have done extensive comparison and research)
- Look at Michelin's product catalogue, for Primacy Tour A/S of these specific sizes, both of them have the "GOE" label (you can also see these letters molded on the side wall), which means "Genesis OEM". Since only the G90 is using these sizes, it further indicates these tires are specially designed for the G90.
I have only driven about 20 miles after changing the tire so I do not have a full review at this moment. For now I can only say 90% of the vibration has gone. I still feel"faint" vibrations on some under-maintained section of the road, which surface is non-flat and sometimes rough. I will report more findings as I accumulate more miles on these tires.
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